Post Profile

When "Pokémon GO" first launched, Niantic didn't provide much in terms of instructions for the game, leaving it up to the players to figure out the mechanics. Two guys from New York decided to start a community that harnessed the power of crowdsourcing to help crack it open and offer a network for trading. "The Silph Road" has since become one of the most popular and useful resources for players all over the world.read more

share

Related Posts

Niantic's Pok?mon Go has hit over 100 million downloads across the App Store and Google Play, but doesn't appear to be generating much of a hazard -- or windfall -- for other game developers, according to an analytics firm.

It didn't take long after its early July launch for Pok émon Go to become a phenomenon — and even less time after that for players to totally overload the game's servers, causing the game's developer Niantic Labs to pause internatio...

John Hanke, the CEO of Pokémon Go developer Niantic, hinted in an interview with Forbes' Ryan Mac that popular fan-made tools like Pok é Vision, Pok é Radar, and Pok é Notify may not be long for this world.
Here's what Hanke has to ...

Amid revelations that the popular Pok?mon Go game for iPhone offers universal access to Google accounts, Google and Niantic have said that user emails and other sensitive data are not being harvested, and that a pair of fixes are in...